School of BusinessBusiness Administration Dept.

Department of Business AdministrationE336 Thompson HallFredonia State University of New YorkFredonia, NY 14063Ph: (716) 673-3505Fax: (716) 673-3506Email Department

Dr. Charles S.V. Telly

Profile & Curriculum Vitae

June 2008

CURRICULUM VITAE

DR. CHARLES S. V. TELLY

College of Business Office SUNY at Fredonia Fredonia, New York 14063 USATelephone: (716) 673-4604Fax: (716) 673-3506

EDUCATION:

Columbia University Law School. J.S.D. 1976-1984. (Ph.D. in Corporate Law). (Dissertation title: "Proxies and the Modern Corporation:
Scienter Under Sections 14a and 10b of the Securities Exchange Act").

Columbia University Law School. LL.M. 1975-1976. John Jay Fellowship. (Thesis title: "The Classical Economic Model and The Nature of Property in the 18th
and 19th Centuries").

University of Washington. (Seattle). Ph.D. in Business 1964-1967. Graduated No. 1 in the class. (Dissertation title: "Inequity and its Relation to
Turnover Among Hourly Workers in the Major Production Shops of a Large Aerospace Firm
(Boeing). Minor in Philosophy. Karl Marx and Lenin Studies under Melvin Rader.

University of Arizona. M.A. Philosophy. 1960-1962. Graduated No. 1 in class 4.0 GPA.(Thesis title: "The Christian Man of Kierkegaard and the Ubermensche of Nietzsche")

University of Buffalo Law School. JD Law. 1954-1958. Primary interests were in Corporate Law, Constitutional Law, Contracts and Property.

Rated "A" professor in "Course Critique" evaluating 600 professors at the University
of Washington. Only 33 were rated "A" professors. Only one other professor was "A"
rated in the School of Business. (In 1967, the School of Business had 80 full-time
faculty members and 25 pre-doctoral teaching faculty.) (1965)

"Journey for Perspective" awarded to three in Ph.D. program at the University of Washington
in conjunction with 4 other schools (Stanford, Berkeley, UCLA and USC). It was a European
trip to conference with business and government leaders in England, France, Germany
and Russia. Also sent to do research project mentioned, infra. (1965)

Courses Taught in Business: Business Policy, Organization Theory, OrganizationBehavior, International Business, Investment Analysis, Social Responsibility of Business,
Decision Theory, The Corporation in Modern Society, The Legal Environment of Business,
Ethics

State University of New York at Fredonia, Professor of Business, since 1985. Teach
Strategy of the Firm, Management and Organization Behavior, Legal Environment of Business,
Investment Analysis.

Fulbright Scholar, University of Tirana and Fan S. Noli University in Korce, 1992-1994.
In the Economics School taught Economics and Management and Organization Behavior.
In the Law School taught American Contract Law. Also asked by old Communist Judges
to teach them how to be judges in the new democratic society.

University of Tirana, Tirana, Albania, Visiting Professor, Asked to teach the professors
how to teach the economics, business, and law courses in a democratic society. (June
1991, October 1991, March 1992).

University of North Carolina, Greensboro, Visiting Professor of Business, taught Business
Strategy, Legal Environment of Business and Management and Organization Behavior.
(1984-1985).

Oklahoma City University School of Law, Associate Professor, taught Corporate Law,
Contracts, Anti-Trust Law, and Securities Law (1982-1984).

University of Washington. Visiting Professor of Business, taught Government and Society,
Management Theory, and Business Strategy. Spring 1982.

Article - "Inequity and Its Relationship to Turnover Among Hourly Workers in the Major Production
Shops of the Boeing Company," Academy of Management Proceedings, pp. 119-124, August
1969.

Chapter in Book (Chapter 26) - "Business Law and the Legal Responsibility of Business," in Business: An Introductory
Analysis, 2nd edition, by Bayard Wheeler, Harper and Row Publishers, 1968.

Research Article - "The Nature of Organizational Justice in the Business Organizations of Southern
Yugoslavia, Greece, and South Central Italy," in A Collection of Research Works by
the Journey for Perspective Foundation. John Hancock Life Insurance Co., San Francisco,
California, September 1965.

December 1-3, 1988, Chocolate: Food of the Gods - - A Symposium, at Hofstra University.
Paper delivered: "Chocolate: An Analysis of Its Quality and Flavor for Commerce."

Association of American Law Schools Meeting in Cincinnati at Cincinnati Convention-Exposition
Center January 5-8, 1983. Participated in Discussion of Professional Responsibility
specifically ways in which the "philosophical" study of the professional responsibility
of lawyers is both legitimate and proper, and, moreover, very pertinent as supplemental
to the old concept of only dealing with the "law" content.

Association of American Law Schools Meeting in NYC January 6-9, 1979. Participated
in Discussion of Anti-Trust and Economic Regulation devoted to analysis of mergers
under the recently issued Justice Department Merger Guidelines and the FTC Statement
on Horizontal Mergers.

Association of American Law School, Meeting in Chicago. Participated in Discussion
of Law and Economics where the issue was how much effect economics has on the legal
and philosophical aspects of Law, January 4-7, 1976.

Western Academy of Management Meetings, Las Vegas, Nevada, Paper delivered: "A Position
Paper on the AACSB Rules Pertaining to Business and Society Courses,"(1975).

Western Academy of Management Meetings, San Francisco, Paper delivered: "An Argument
for Changing of AACSB Rules Pertaining to Business and Society Courses." (1974).

Western Academy of Management Meetings, Boulder, Colorado, Paper delivered: "The Corporation
and Its Responsibility in Today's Society." (1972).

National Academy of Management Meetings Cincinnati, Ohio, Paper delivered: "Inequity
and Its Relationship to Turnover Among Hourly Workers in the Major Production Shops
of the Boeing Company. (1969).

"Western Academy of Management Meetings, Long Beach, California, Paper Delivered "A
Study of the Concept of Equity in Business Organizations." (1969).

COMMITTEE MEETINGS AND PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

At each of the schools where I have taught, I endeavored to participate and do my
duty in the governance and administration of the school of business or the school
of law.

In the business schools I have always volunteered to be on the curriculum committee
because of my interest in a strong curriculum for a solid academic program. Since
I have been at Fredonia the longest, I have been influential in building a sound curriculum.

In each law school where I taught, I not only influenced the curriculum, but was a
member of the admissions committee. This committee admits students to the law school.
The strong committee involvement affects the quality of students who enter the law
school. Each of us on the committee was committed to screening and refusing the weak
candidates to ensure a strong law school student body.

At Fredonia, we have agreed to establish a curriculum that is highly academic and
also has strong required prerequisite courses that our faculty teaches and that the
junior college students must take regardless of what they have taken at the junior
college level. This requirement strengthens the entire program and legitimatizes the
later conceptual and synthesizing classes.

PROFESSIONAL PHILOSOPHY

In each of the business schools where I have been they have asked me to be chairman.
I have refused.

I love to teach and to write and to teach from my own materials.

I have no intention of retiring. I am just getting very good at what I do. Why should
I retire at the top of my game? As Joe Paterno (the head football coach at Penn State
University) says, "This is what I do."

Plato taught because he loved to teach as did his mentor Socrates. I teach in the
Socratic method calling on the student to critically understand the material. Then,
as more materials are understood on both sides of the issue a sound analytical conclusion
is asked for.

To me teaching is based on Plato's "Allegory of the Cave" (Plato's Republic Book VII,
514a-517a) which postulates that we want and need to find the light which is truth.
In Heidegger's translation, he translates light as the "unhidden." It is difficult
to pull up the stake that binds you to that position in the cave and then, to struggle
away from the cave ultimately to reach the light. Further, it is also difficult to
go back to help others pull up their stakes and follow you to the light.

It is very satisfying to live the life of reason and the search for truth. And although
it never ends, it is surely the greatness of life to be forever in pursuit. Socrates
says it well in Plato's Dialogue the Apology, "the unexamined life is not worth living."

Consultant and Legal Funds Counsel: SCR is an organization which receives government funds to help revitalize small businesses
in the community. June 1978-1979. Law students and I advised several commercial districts
in Dayton and helped them incorporate into non-profit Corporations in order to receive
government funds. (June 1978-1979).

Consultant and Researcher: IML Co., one of the largest U.S. trucking firms. Research study with grad student.
(November 1974-August 1975).

Consultant: Rate cases, People v. Utah Power & Light Co. before Utah Public Service Commission.
Economists and I, from University of Utah, were hired to testify as experts. (November
1974-August 1975).

The Fulbright Fellowship gave me the opportunity to learn Albanian so I could lecture
in Albanian. I'm the only American to have done this. I taught economics and management
in The Business School for one semester and contracts in the Law School at the University
of Tirana. The second year I taught courses in economics and management and a course
in law at Fan S. Noli University in Korce, Albania. (1992-1994).

As a Fulbright I did many things. An American Lawyer said he had access to several
judges from the U.S.A. I suggested a conference for all the judges in Albania. We
put on the 1st Annual Conference. These have become yearly conferences. (It should
be noted that the judges of Albania had no robes to wear. Through my brother-in-law,
a Presbyterian Minister, used gowns were sent from all over the US so we could "award"
gowns to the Albanian judges).

We also began a series of lectures at the police academy. We brought police officers
from the United States. The lectures are continuing series. I lectured for two semesters.

By this time I had been to Albania four (4) times. I had carefully traveled to every
part of Albania. My family in Albania is huge, numbering over 300 members. I taught
at the University of Tirana in Albania. (1990-1992).

Taught Management and Organization Theory (October 11-26, 1991) and Economics (March
3-20, 1992) in Tirana, Albania at the University of Tirana, College of Business and
Economics.

Taught Management and Organization Theory at the University of Tirana, College of
Business and Economics, and Corporate Law at the College of Law, June 10- 28, 1991.
Classes were taught to professors, not students.

Taught for University of Utah in European Program at U.S. Air Force Bases in Wiesbaden,
and Ramstein, Germany. Further, lived in Cambridge and taught in Alconbury and Lakenheath,
England. October 1973-March 1974.

Traveled extensively in all of Europe. Wide knowledge and background in Southeast
Europe, especially Albania and Yugoslavia. Lectured in Economics Department at the
University of Utah on comparative economics. (1965).

3. Professor Harvey Goldschmid Columbia University Law School435 West 116th StreetNew York, NY 10027 (He stepped away from teaching for four years 2002-2005 - first to advise the SEC
and then to be a member of the SEC. Now, my mentor and the finest professor at Columbia
Law School, is back to teaching.)